The Janitor Effect: Why Companies With Spotless Hallways Outperform the S&P 500 presents a powerful and unconventional thesis: that the physical cleanliness of a workplace is not just a matter of aesthetics, but a key indicator of a company's culture, discipline, and long-term performance. Drawing from psychology, operational theory, and case studies, the book argues that attention to environmental order reflects deeper organizational values-like accountability, pride, and ownership-that correlate directly with high performance and employee engagement. Clean hallways and well-maintained breakrooms aren't superficial-they're the physical evidence of a high-functioning system.Throughout the book, we see how cleanliness operates at multiple levels of business: from employee behavior and leadership modeling to scalable systems, remote work protocols, and even AI-driven facility management. The chapters explore how disorder erodes culture and trust, how respect for janitorial and support staff reinforces company-wide integrity, and how the physical environment shapes not only productivity but morale and psychological safety. Cleanliness is shown to be a cultural standard, a management tool, and ultimately, a strategic asset that affects everything from customer perception to investor confidence.In the final chapters, the book looks forward, emphasizing that in an age of hybrid work, automation, and ESG priorities, cleanliness will only become more essential-and more measurable. Companies that treat it as a core component of strategy rather than a support function will outperform in both brand and bottom line. The Janitor Effect ultimately makes the case that great companies don't wait until performance slips to raise their standards. They start with the basics-from the floor up-and build a culture of care, order, and excellence that touches every level of the organization.